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The 2022–2023 mpox outbreak in India is a part of the ongoing outbreak of human mpox caused by the West African clade of the monkeypox virus.The outbreak was first reported in India on 14 July 2022 when Kerala's State Health Minister Veena George announced a suspected imported case which was confirmed hours later by the NIV.
The death toll rose to 16 after 4 people, including one in Dharavi, [50] died from the virus in Mumbai. [51] On 2 April, Maharashtra reported 88 new cases, taking the total to 423. These included 54 in Mumbai, 9 in other parts of MMR, 11 in Pune, 9 in Ahmednagar, 2 in Aurangabad and 1 each in Buldhana, Satara and Osmanabad. Four more people ...
By late April, India led the world in new and active cases. On 30 April 2021, it became the first country to report over 400,000 new cases in a 24-hour period. [ 15 ] [ 6 ] Experts stated that the virus may reach an endemic stage in India rather than completely disappear; [ 16 ] in late August 2021, Soumya Swaminathan said India may be in some ...
About a third of India's 71,865 confirmed virus cases, and nearly 40% of its 2,415 deaths, have been reported in Maharashtra, the coastal state in the center of the country that is home to ...
There are 13 states, plus New York City, especially experiencing a spike. The list of states where respiratory illness levels are very high is below: Louisiana. South Carolina. New Mexico ...
Kozhikode, India - September 07: (BILD ZEITUNG OUT) Officials deposit a bat into a Plastic bag after catching it on September 07, 2021 in Kozhikode, India. The Nipah virus is carried mainly by ...
The National Centre for Disease Informatics and Research, ICMR, released a document titled "Guidance for appropriate recording of COVID-19 related deaths in India". [2] In March 2020, the first two COVID-19 infected people to die in India officially died due to their co-morbidities and not COVID-19. [3]
2021 Nipah virus outbreak in Kerala; B. 2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak; C. Timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic in India (January–May 2020)